No number 1 driver at Ferrari for 2022 F1 season

Charles Leclerc and Carlos Sainz will continue to have equal status at Ferrari during the 2022 Formula 1 season, according to team principal Mattia Binotto. 
(L to R): Carlos Sainz Jr (ESP) Ferrari and team mate Charles Leclerc (MON) Ferrari - 2022 Car Launch.
(L to R): Carlos Sainz Jr (ESP) Ferrari and team mate Charles Leclerc (MON…
© xpbimages.com

Ferrari was clear that both its drivers had equal footing throughout 2021, with team orders only imposed to benefit the team’s prospects amid its intense battle with McLaren over third place in the constructors’ championship, which it eventually prevailed in. 

Sainz and Leclerc were closely matched throughout the campaign, with Sainz finishing ahead in the drivers’ standings by five and a half points. Earlier in the season, Binotto had declared his team’s line-up as being the best on the F1 grid. 

Binotto confirmed that Ferrari will not adopt a policy of having a number one driver in 2022. 

“In terms of drivers, as we often said, it’s the track that will dictate it,” Binotto said. 

“The priority is always the team, but no doubt, if they can compete for an important position in the championship, it will be the track that will tell who is ahead. 

“Sometimes it’s not only about driver talent and driver capacity - a driver can be a lot unfortunate, and having damages, reliability issues, or crashes. 

“We will not have a policy of number one and number two. We will simply discuss it in terms of positions on track whenever it will be time.” 

Charles Leclerc (MON) Ferrari SF-21 leads team mate Carlos Sainz Jr (ESP) Ferrari SF-21.
Charles Leclerc (MON) Ferrari SF-21 leads team mate Carlos Sainz Jr (ESP)…
© xpbimages.com

Despite being beaten by Sainz in their first year as teammates together, Binotto stressed he had been “very happy” with Leclerc’s performances across the season and pointed out that the Monegasque lost around 40 points due to bad luck. 

“I think he's has always been somehow very fast in qualifying, even in the last part of the season where maybe Carlos was challenging him a bit more,” Binotto said. 

“I think we should not forget that in the season, there are a couple of examples, which is Monaco and Budapest, where he didn't score. I think he has been unlucky as a driver in those occasions.

“Without those, and it’s difficult to say where he would have finished, but maybe at least 40 points is missing from his classification. So without that, again, I think he would have been a lot further ahead in the championship.

“So that's why again I can only judge very positively his season. He has learned, furthermore, how to manage the tyres, how to manage the race situations and the race pace. So I am quite pleased on the progress he has made.”

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